Multiproxy approach to reconstruct the climate and environment of a new late Middle Pleistocene vertebrate site in northwestern Italy

The Moleto site (Ottiglio, AL, Piemonte, Italy) was discovered in the 1990s in an abandoned quarry carved into a Burdigalian-Langhian carbonate succession called Pietra da Cantoni. Sediment collection in three closely spaced fissures provided a rich vertebrate association whose age can be constraine...

ver descrição completa

Detalhes bibliográficos
Autores: Piñero, Pedro|||0000-0002-5626-2777, López García, Juan Manuel|||0000-0003-1605-9763, Blain, Hugues-Alexandre|||0000-0002-9920-2707, Carnevale, Giorgio|||0000-0002-3433-4127, Furió, Marc|||0000-0002-4582-3268, Giuntelli, Piero, Luzi, Elisa, Macaluso, Loredana|||0000-0002-6491-0498, Marramà, Giuseppe|||0000-0002-7856-5605, Pal, Shubham|||0000-0001-8545-624X, Pavia, Giulio|||0000-0001-8843-3086, Pavia, Marco|||0000-0002-5188-4155, Pezzetti, Claudia, Rocca, Massimo, Sánchez Bandera, Christian|||0000-0002-7877-3332, Villa, Andrea|||0000-0001-6544-5201, Delfino, Massimo|||0000-0001-7836-7265
Formato: artículo
Fecha de publicación:2024
País:España
Recursos:Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona
Repositorio:Dipòsit Digital de Documents de la UAB
Idioma:inglés
OAI Identifier:oai:ddd.uab.cat:301273
Acesso em linha:https://ddd.uab.cat/record/301273
https://dx.doi.org/urn:doi:10.1016/j.palaeo.2023.111935
Access Level:acceso abierto
Palavra-chave:Vertebrate assemblage
Mutual Ecogeographic Range
Bioclimatic Model
Quantified Ecology
Habitat Weightings
Marine Isotope Stage 7
Descrição
Resumo:The Moleto site (Ottiglio, AL, Piemonte, Italy) was discovered in the 1990s in an abandoned quarry carved into a Burdigalian-Langhian carbonate succession called Pietra da Cantoni. Sediment collection in three closely spaced fissures provided a rich vertebrate association whose age can be constrained to the late Middle Pleistocene on the basis of the presence of the extinct water vole Arvicola mosbachensis and its enamel characteristics (SDQ values ranging from 100 to 130). The very similar faunal content, evidenced by the common presence of Arvicola mosbachensis and its similar SDQ values, is indicative of a coeval deposition of the fillings of the three fissures. The vertebrate assemblage is represented by 30 taxa, including amphibians, squamate reptiles, birds, and mammals. Interestingly, a diverse fish assemblage from the embedded sediments of the Miocene Pietra da Cantoni has been found in the fissure fillings. We present here a multi-method approach using the small vertebrate assemblages (rodents, insectivores, amphibians, and squamate reptiles) from Moleto to characterize the environment and climate of the site. In order to reconstruct the palaeoenvironmental and palaeoclimatic conditions, we applied the Mutual Ecogeographic Range using UDA-ODA technique, the Bioclimatic Model, the Habitat Weightings, and the Quantified Ecology methods. The results revealed a landscape dominated by woodland habitats with presence of open humid meadows, under temperate and moist climatic conditions, although somewhat colder and drier than today. According to all evidence, the associations from Moleto would correspond to the interglacial MIS 7.